Age influences audiovisual speech processing in multi-talker scenarios – Evidence from cortical oscillations

Author:

Begau AlexandraORCID,Klatt Laura-IsabelleORCID,Schneider DanielORCID,Wascher EdmundORCID,Getzmann StephanORCID

Abstract

AbstractAge-related differences in the processing of audiovisual speech in a multi-talker environment were investigated analyzing event-related spectral perturbations (ERSPs), focusing on theta, alpha, and beta oscillations that are assumed to reflect conflict processing, multisensory integration, and attentional mechanisms, respectively. Eighteen older and 21 younger healthy adults completed a two-alternative forced-choice word discrimination task, responding to audiovisual speech stimuli. In a cocktail-party scenario with two competing talkers (located at-15° and 15° azimuth), target words (/yes/ or /no/) appeared at a pre-defined (attended) position, distractor words at the other position. In two audiovisual conditions, acoustic speech was combined either with congruent or uninformative visual speech. While a behavioral benefit for congruent audiovisual speech occurred for both age groups, differences between audiovisual conditions in the theta and beta band were only present for older adults. A stronger increase in theta perturbations for stimuli containing uninformative visual speech could be associated with early conflict processing, while a stronger suppression in beta perturbations for congruent audiovisual speech could be associated to audiovisual integration. Compared to the younger group, the older group showed generally stronger beta perturbations. No condition differences in the alpha band were found. Overall, the findings suggest age-related differences in audiovisual speech integration in a multi-talker environment. While the behavioral benefit of congruent audiovisual speech was unaffected by age, older adults had a stronger need for cognitive control when processing conflicting audiovisual speech input. Furthermore, mechanisms of audiovisual integration are differently activated depending on the informational content of the visual information.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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